One day after “Full House” actress Lori Loughlin was caught in a nationwide college admissions scandal, the University of Southern California confirmed it is reviewing the applications of students whose families are involved in the case.

“We are going to conduct a case-by-case review for current students and graduates that may be connected to the scheme alleged by the government,” the university said in an email Wednesday. “We will make informed, appropriate decisions once those reviews have been completed.”

The statement also notes that some of these students “may have been minors at the time of their application process,” but it’s not clear whether their age would protect her from a potential expulsion.

Current USC applicants who are connected to the alleged scheme will be denied admission, the statement said.

Wake Forest University, a highly selective private university in North Carolina, said the only student it has connected to the case was admitted and would not be expelled.

“We have no reason to believe the student was aware of the alleged financial transaction,” Wake Forest President Nathan Hatch said Wednesday in a statement.

Authorities said most parents in the scheme tried to hide the plan from their child, but there were cases when children did know about it. While parents and coaches have been charged in the case, students have not faced charges.

A spokesman for Yale University, which also had one student whose family was implicated, said in a statement that it “may take further actions,” but he did not directly address the fate of the student.

Jade, who has almost 2 million subscribers on her YouTube channel, shrugged off her college education in an August 2018 video.

“I don’t know how much of school I’m going to attend, but I’m going to go in and talk to my deans and everyone and hope that I can try to balance it all,” she said in the video. “But I do want the experience of game days, partying — I don’t really care about school, as you guys all know."

The statement comes a day after USC fired two employees accused of participating in the nearly decade-long conspiracy. They were Donna Heinel, the senior associate athletic director, and polo coach Jovan Vavic.